NEWS RELEASE
March 12, 2004
For
Immediate Release
Oscar
Lacombe -
Honoured on Monday, sentenced on Wednesday
EDMONTON -
On Monday, March 15, retired Alberta Sergeant at Arms Oscar Lacombe
will be formally recognized in the Speaker's gallery by the Alberta
Legislative Assembly.
Then, at 11
a.m. on Wednesday, March 17, he will appear in Edmonton Provincial
Court before Judge David McNab for verdict and possible sentencing on
Criminal Code charges of not registering a rifle.
Lacombe, age
75, was in charge of Legislature order and security for 13 and a half
years, and prior to that Peter Lougheed's personal body guard. From
1949 to 1973 he served in the Canadian Army, hauling ammunition in
Korea in 1952 and peace-keeping in Cyprus, Egypt, Gaza and other
trouble spots in the 1950s and '60s.
Upon his
retirement in 1993, he was named Honourary Alberta Sergeant-at-Arms
for Life by a special resolution of the Legislative Assembly.
A Metis,
Lacombe was born and raised in a trapper's cabin in the St. Paul area
in 1929, one of 12 children. He is a great-great grandnephew of the
missionary Albert Lacombe, and great-grandson of Edmonton pioneer
Lawrence Garneau.
He shot his
first deer with a .22 at age 9 to help feed his family during the Depression.
He was
prosecuted by the Alberta Justice Department for publicly boycotting
the new gun registration section of the Criminal Code on January 1, 2003.
Several MLAs
have said they will attend Lacombe's sentencing. Also supporting him
will be some of the Alberta farmers who went to jail in Lethbridge
for selling their own wheat in the U.S.
Lacombe's
legal defence has been assisted by the Citizens Centre for Freedom
and Democracy.
Using the
Citizens Centre Web site, Albertans and other Canadians have sent
over 85,000 letters urging the provincial cabinet to leave gun
registry enforcement to the federal government under the Firearms
Act, as it has promised since 1998.